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Welcome to the Wannabee Hobby Beekeepers site. Our club was organized in 2009 and has grown to over 200 members. The purpose of our club is to create and further develop interest in honey bees and beekeeping in our beautiful Black Hills area as well as elsewhere. Our club provides a forum to share knowledge and mutual interests in beekeeping. Club Guidelines

The Mission of our club is to provide our membership and the general public with information and discussions to promote honey bees and beekeeping in the Black Hills.

2016-2017 Meetings

Our monthly meetings begin with a social time starting at 5:30 PM and the meeting begins at 6:00 PM on the 2nd Wednesday of the month at the:

Bob Reiners is our SD State Apiarist and he will provide free hive inspectionsfor those of you who have registered your hives with the State AND you have lost your colony for unknown reasons. He will try to help determine what went wrong. His contact information, as well as information for all other states, can be found here — the Apiary Inspectors Of America.

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Did you know? North Dakota and South Dakota are the 2 top honey-producing states in the country. In 2012 – ND produced about 34 million pounds of honey while SD produced around 17 million pounds. See March 22, 2013 RC Journal article.

South Dakota designated the Honeybee as the official state insect in 1978. Other states that have designated the honeybee as a state/agricultural insect (or bug) include:

Arkansas

Georgia

Kansas

Louisiana

Maine

Mississippi

Missouri

Nebraska

New Jersey

North Carolina

Oklahoma

South Dakota

Tennessee

Utah

Vermont

West Virginia

Wisconsin

The North Dakota state insect is the convergent lady beetle.

Biggest honeybee keeper in South Dakota (and the world!) is Richard Adee of Adee Honey Farms. See more about Adee Bees in this article from the Twin Cities Pioneer press (8/24/2013) and this you tube video.

In 2009, South Dakota had 185 registered beekeepers with 30% being commercial producers and the remaining 70% being hobbyist beekeepers. There were 290,000 colonies registered in the state in 2009. Nationwide, the average annual production per hive was 67 pounds (from 2002 to 2007). In South Dakota it was an estimated 71 pounds per hive in the same time frame. South Dakota ranks between 1st and 5th in the United States in total honey production (in 2009, we were number 2 with 17.8 million pounds of honey produced).